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just_another_person

@just_another_person@lemmy.world

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just_another_person ,

This is going to get pretty damn horrific real fast with Sora coming to general release soon. We need some restrictions and laws on the books.

just_another_person ,

I can better explain what I don't want out there, and we've already seen some pretty awful shit. This will usher in a completely new generation of CSAM, bullying, harassment, and political sabotage. It seems we should have some protections or penalties in place to cover such things.

just_another_person ,

Who's benefiting from this? Why is this even a fucking thing?

just_another_person ,

Like Marvel and Star Wars, friend.

Enough is enough.

just_another_person ,

Why would you ever trust a Jack Dorsey thing of any kind?

just_another_person ,

SOME WOULD SAY you don't need the controllers. Then you're just a regular VR headset. Would Apple say that? No. I think this boils down to a dumb product with lackluster payoff at $3.5k.

just_another_person ,

You can open source anything, really. This is just not useful in an ecosystem of Apple-only bullshit. Who cares if it's open?

just_another_person ,

The Flipper has become prolific in the crime world, apparently.

Apple's next generation CarPlay allows auto manufacturers to license the OS | Don't look now but Apple is back to licensing an operating system after decades (www.techspot.com)

Apple's next generation CarPlay allows auto manufacturers to license the OS | Don't look now but Apple is back to licensing an operating system after decades::undefined

just_another_person ,

Friend...I don't think you know exactly what you're talking about here, because you'd want a standardized API running ON THE CAR as an interface for what you describe. Client -> API -> Control.

Also, QNX is a real-time OS bought by Blackberry back in the day. It literally runs the car (most models on the road), so would probably interface with whatever to control things at some point.

just_another_person , (edited )

Nice edits there 😂

My point is you're using words that you clearly don't know the context of. You can say open this or that all day long, but you very clearly do not understand what QNX is, how it runs, or what it runs. You therefore don't understand the comment you replied to, which I explained for you in my reply, which you then replied with the some gibberish you don't understand, because you don't understand what an API is or where it should run.

Now, let's say some uniformity comes into existence by an ISO/ISSA or 20022 group that makes a generic framework of calls clients can make to control whatever in a car. Then automakers need to define the backend controls for direct hardware interfaces, which would not be universal since any car models will have different parts. The translation layer there needs to run on something directly connected to the car hardware. This is what QNX does. If there was a shift away from something like an RTOS as a controller mechanism, you'd still need whatever the control layer runs on to be able to directly interface with the hardware. You can just call something an API and then wave your hands around like you know what you're saying, but not understanding how it all fits together.

just_another_person ,

There is a small group concern taking the law into their own hands, yes.

just_another_person ,

Lol. You better just ban all programmable boards then, because the Flipper doesn't have any special proprietary or differential tech in it. It's just a clever collection of already existing hardware and software. Someone will just make another immediately. Idiots.

just_another_person ,

The Flipper is literally just an ends to a means. An easily accessible action for hardware. Nobody is stopping any random person from buying a number of $3 dongles for their laptop and using it in the exact same way.

just_another_person ,

It depends on which state, which is even more sad.

just_another_person ,

They don't discuss it here, but it's most likely a reinforcement model that operates different generations of learned behavior to decide if it's improving or not.

It would know that the ball going in the hole is "bad", and then try to avoid that happening. Each move that is "good' is then kept in a list of moves it should perform in the next generation of its plan to avoid the "bad" things. Loop -> fail -> logic build -> retry. After 6 hours, it has mapped a complete list of "good" moves to affect it's final outcome.

The answer your question: no, it would not be able to use what it learned here on a different map of the board. It's building reactions to events based on this one board, and bound by rules. You could use the ruleset with another board, but it would need to learn it all again just as a human would.

The thing about these models is less that they will work (it is assumed they eventually will through trial and error), but how efficiently they will work. The number of generational cycles and retries is usually the benchmark when dealing with reinforcement, but they don't discuss that data here either.

Sphere in Las Vegas made $167.8M in revenue for first three full months | KSNV (news3lv.com)

Sphere in Las Vegas made $167.8M in revenue for first three full months | KSNV::KSNV NBC Las Vegas covers news, sports, weather and traffic for the Las Vegas, Nevada area including Paradise, Spring Valley, Henderson, North Las Vegas, Indian Springs, Sloan, Searchlight, Laughlin and Nellis AFB.

just_another_person ,

In 10 years this thing may very well be near abandoned and doing the same thing countless underfunded planetariums around the US have been doing for years to get some cash and stay operating.

Laser Floyd

just_another_person , (edited )

TLDR: WiFi 7 isn't even ratified or "out" yet, so of course there isn't enough hardware for it.

The WiFi 7 standard hasn't even been finalized. It's not unusual to see companies marketing hardware BEFORE final ratification, but it's like a marketing gimmick more than an actual case of "early adoption" hardware. If you're seeing a situation like this one where a few companies sell routers that support the equipment standard, and there's only one of two adapters that do, just stay away. The Wi-Fi Alliance JUST released the WF7 certification criteria on January 8th, so maybe companies will start trying to release hardware now.

just_another_person ,

Okay, so then the BE200 is an Intel product that offloads to the northbridge or CPU extensions...not that unusual. If it specifically says it supports only Intel chipsets, then you're getting exactly what they are promising, right?

just_another_person ,

TLDR: It's rendering single images from Doom on cell-based frame displays, not running the game itself.

Mark Zuckerberg explained how Meta will crush Google and Microsoft at AI—and Meta warned it could cost more than $30 billion a year (finance.yahoo.com)

Mark Zuckerberg explained how Meta will crush Google and Microsoft at AI—and Meta warned it could cost more than $30 billion a year::The Facebook cofounder said the vast trove of photos and videos shared by users on Meta's various services is larger than the web content crawled by search engines like those of Google and...

just_another_person ,

I work on 3 monitors during the day, with multiple virtual desktops. It solves for that, and that alone. That being said, I wouldn't pay $3500 for the privilege, especially when it ONLY operates in the Apple ecosystem, which I don't care for. Other VR desktops exist, but they're all kinda "meh". I'll invest when a device can be used neutrally as just a VR monitor tool.

just_another_person ,

Spatial window arrangements essentially makes an entire 360 space of a room the monitor. You don't need many views at that point.

just_another_person ,

Yeah, that's sort of its purpose. Take away all the dumb Apple notifications and useless info about the world it can detect, because (surprise) it's not portable, and it's a $3500 virtual desktop you don't need navigate with a mouse. It's useful in some cases, sure, but not a general consumer device at this price point or particular case of use. The bull of purchases were probably made by large scale content creation firms to do things like video editing. Sadly, Microsoft's AR glasses were somehow just a stupid, but more useful than Apple's.

What's a good piece of hardware to run a jellyfin server?

I'm wanting to set up my external Seagate drive with all my media on it to run a jellyfin server but I'm not sure which device to use. I'm thinking a raspberry pi but I'm not sure which one. From what I can tell from running the server on my laptop it is fairly CPU intensive for lower end systems...

just_another_person ,

Low-end AMD APU will blow any Intel away for this purpose and also have hardware transcoding capabilities.

just_another_person ,

Not with 128KB RAM. Possible with asset tweaking though.

just_another_person ,

EVERYONE IS SO MUCH BETTER AT COMPUTERS THAN MEEEEEEEE

Elon Musk warns Tesla workers they'll be sleeping on the production line to build its new mass-market EV (www.businessinsider.com)

Elon Musk warns Tesla workers they'll be sleeping on the production line to build its new mass-market EV::Elon Musk said that building Tesla's next-generation EV, which is set to enter production in 2025, will require Tesla workers to sleep on the manufacturing line.

just_another_person ,

I know you are joking, but this asshole's parents were legit in the business of running company towns for mining and exploiting human labor. Just shy of slavery because it was technically legal, but a loophole that allowed them to get rich by taking advantage of people desperate for work. Real pieces of shit in this family.

Boeing Whistleblower: Production Line Has “Enormous Volume Of Defects” Bolts On MAX 9 Weren’t Installed (viewfromthewing.com)

Boeing Whistleblower: Production Line Has “Enormous Volume Of Defects” Bolts On MAX 9 Weren’t Installed::A reader at respected airline industry site Leeham News offered a comment that suggests they have access to Boeing’s internal quality control systems, and shares details of what they saw regarding the Boeing 737 MAX 9...

just_another_person ,

If true, Boeing will cease to exist in a few years for the amount they are about to be sued.

just_another_person ,

If you've never seen an Amazon, FedEx, or UPS facility, you know this is just not likely. They are more secure than prisons. You're not allowed any personal belongings going through to the staging areas, they have metal detectors and multiwave scanners like airports.

Pope calls for treaty regulating AI, warning of potential for ‘technological dictatorship’ (edition.cnn.com)

Pope calls for treaty regulating AI, warning of potential for ‘technological dictatorship’::Pope Francis has called for an international treaty to regulate the use of Artificial Intelligence, warning that the new technology risks causing a “technological dictatorship” which would threaten peace and democracy.

just_another_person ,

Same. Pixel + GrapheneOS sounds like the move for most now.

just_another_person ,

Because the spectrum required (UV-C) to do so is harmful to humans and the environment. Putting it EVERYWHERE would cause all kinds of problems.

just_another_person ,

All his fanboys should be absolutely shitting bricks about this since Elon has been out there for years saying that people who purchase Tesla vehicles absolutely own them. He's been spouting this bullshit since they got caught remotely crippling software features YEARS ago, but this is further proof Tesla owners are completely at the whim of a tyrannical douchebag who decides if you get the privilege of using something you paid for the way you want.

just_another_person ,

Bull.Shit.

Define the criteria, have it peer reviewed and diagnosed, or else we will ALL be diagnosed with Autism soon enough.

just_another_person ,

Of course they did. Microsoft tried this in the 90's with Internet Explorer, Outlook, and Explorer. Sure, it does three different things, but it's the SAME THING.

just_another_person ,

Because then they can avoid social media again by building their own catalog of interest.

just_another_person ,

Dumb article. Will save everyone a click:

  1. lower level languages
  2. higher/wider concurrency
  3. faster auto-scaling

The same formula for every platform operating out there. What they don't talk about is efficiency, which is always the most juicy part of these kinds of writeups. You can scale anything to do 50b messages with enough money and resources, but how efficient is it?

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